The following essay is taken from Frank F. White, Jr., The Governors
of Maryland 1777-1970 (Annapolis: The Hall of Records Commission,
1970), 61-62.

"EDWARD LLOYD, one of the youngest men to occupy the Governor’s chair,
brought to that office the prestige of an aristocratic family which not
only held enormous tracts of land on the Eastern Shore, but also one which
possessed a long tradition of public service. With his family background,
Lloyd should have been an adherent of the Federalist Party. Instead, he
was, like his predecessors Wright and Bowie, a Republican. Edward Lloyd,
the fifth of that name in Maryland history, was born at Wye House in Talbot
County on July 22, 1779, the son of Edward and Elizabeth (Tayloe) Lloyd.
His father had been active in government during the colonial and provincial
period, representing Talbot County in the Lower House, then becoming a
member of the Provincial Convention, the Governor’s Council, a State Senator,
delegate to the Continental Congress and the State Convention which ratified
the Federal Constitution. In keeping with this tradition, it was somewhat
inevitable that the son entered politics and held public office.

"Edward Lloyd received his formal education from tutors in the best
southern tradition. His real training, however, was gained neither at school
nor from books, but through family contacts. On November 30, 1797, he married
Sally
Scott Murray, daughter of Dr. James Murray of Annapolis. To them were born
three sons and four daughters. In 1800, when he was just twenty-one years
of age, he was elected to the House of Delegates, and he served in that
body during the sessions of 1800 to 1805.

"In that year he was elected to the United States House of Representatives
to fill the unexpired term of Joseph Hopper Nicholson, who had resigned
to accept appointment as a judge of the Court of Appeals. He was reelected
to the Tenth Congress which sat until March 3, 1809.

"Governor Robert Wright resigned as Governor in May of 1809. The General
Assembly which met in special session to choose a successor, overwhelmingly
elected Lloyd to succeed him. In the balloting, he defeated Charles Carroll
of Carrollton and Benjamin Stoddert who between them, received only five
votes, to Lloyd’s eighty-one. To some extent, Lloyd’s election represented
the dawn of a new era in Maryland politics, for he was the first governor
to have been born after the close of the proprietary [p. 62] period.1
Lloyd’s
first term covered only the portion of Governor Wright’s term which expired
in November 1809. At that time, he was re-elected for a second one-year
term, defeating his opponents, Charles Carroll of Carrollton, Levin Winder,
Benjamin Stoddert and John Eager Howard. He was re-elected for his third
term in November 1810, again defeating Howard, Winder and Carroll.

"Tilghman claimed 'no questions of State policy . . . occupied the attention
of the executive and the legislative branches of the Government of Maryland
during the incumbency of Gov. Lloyd. In fact, State politics were absorbed
in national.'2 In actuality, Tilghman’s observations were only
partially accurate. The difficulty lay in the fact that 'the two parties
were so evenly balanced in Maryland . . . that though the Republicans controlled
the executive post, the Federalists regained the speakership in the House
with resulting friction between administrative and legislative branches.'3

"The Republicans, under Lloyd, were able to chalk up several long-range
and far-reaching accomplishments. In 1810, the Legislature abolished the
property qualification for office holding, and reduced the residence requirement
for voting to one year. Finally, the Legislature passed a resolution approving
Jefferson’s embargo as well as his administration.

"At the conclusion of his term on November 16, 1811, Lloyd was chosen
a Senator representing the Eastern Shore. As a member of that body, he
supported President Madison’s war policy and was bitter in his opposition
to all measures which were conciliatory toward England. He was also a presidential
elector in 1812 when he cast his vote for James Madison. He resigned his
seat in the Senate in January 1815. The Republicans, after having been
out of office for several years, again recaptured the General Assembly
and elected Edward Lloyd to a full term in the United States Senate in
1818. He took his seat on December 27 of that year, and at the conclusion
of his term he was re-elected for an additional six years, serving until
January 1826, when, because of ill health, he resigned his seat. Once again
his retirement was only of short duration, for in the same year he was
once more elected to the State Senate for a five year term. During the
sessions of 1826 and 1827, the Senate selected him as its president.

"He died in Annapolis on June 2, 1834, at the age of fifty-five, following
which his body was conveyed across the bay, and buried in the family cemetery
at 'Wye House.' At his death, the Easton Gazette eulogized him as
'an accomplished gentleman who had been called to fill several high stations
both under the State and Federal government and was one of the most successful
practical agriculturists of his time. The social world will extensively
and deeply lament the loss of so distinguished a patron, whose elegant
hospitality was so generally and liberally diffused.'”4

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